A revisionist death in Singapore

SINGAPORE - The passing of Joshua Benjamin Jeyaretnam, Singapore's best-known opposition politician, may not have been psychologically seismic enough to prompt Singapore's middle classes to search their souls, but it did offer an insight into how Singaporean institutions simultaneously constructed and sanitized his life for national memory.
Certainly, the manipulation of personal narratives by the state and its apparatuses is not new, a nation-building process that constructs heroes and demons for citizens to revere and despise.
To this end, the way the Singapore media and some members of the government chose to interpret the live and ideology of JBJ, as he is fondly referred to, is a reflection of how it sees opposition politics, society and, ultimately, the Singapore nation.
Reading through the numerous media reports of plaudits and memories that various prominent people have of JBJ, and the way his death was covered, it is clear how he was posthumously reconstructed: as a fighter, a man of idealism and passion, and one who never gave up no matter how insurmountable the obstacles or opponents.
Comments in the national broadsheet, The Straits Times, included quotes from
the dominant People's Action Party (PAP), one lawmaker observing that "He was
like the Chinese doll, the bu dao weng - you knock him down, he comes
back, you knock him down, he comes back up again."
Another PAP parliamentarian noted, "I have admiration for people like him, a
person who never gives up, a person who suffered for his convictions, and who
goes down fighting all the way." Why he needed to be knocked down over and over
again, or go down fighting, was expediently left out of the reports.
A columnist of the same newspaper noted that "when both your friends and
political enemies use the same descriptions of you, you can be sure they are
true. In Mr Jeyaretnam's case, sincerity, tenacity and courage are words many
have used to describe him." Other words that could have been cited include
social justice, human rights, martyr and PAP hegemony, but you didn't see them
used in the media.
In a way, Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew's silence about JBJ's death has been the
most honest reaction so far. The mutual dislike between the two men was real,
with Lee infamously promising to leave his rival on "bended knee". Lee's lack
of a condolence message may seem uncharitable to some, but it is, at least, a
dignified stance and more importantly spares JBJ's family and Singaporeans a
public display of crocodile tears.
Of course, if the construction of JBJ is but a careful cherry-picking of the
man's beliefs and actions, then his persona may have been turned into an
ideological site to fulfill a specific purpose. In Singapore's politics,
despite the country's economic success and material affluence, the one nagging
concern amongst citizens and politicians alike has been the price of that
success.
Political apathy, ignorance of national history, over-dependence on the state,
and crass materialism winning out over idealism have all been perennial tropes
in countless public forums and conferences dealing with local politics. The
flight of talented Singaporeans overseas, adding to the estimated 150,000
already abroad, is another side-effect of economic success.
JBJ had always been the embodiment of idealism, but he was often portrayed as
naive and full of rhetoric against the better-grounded, pragmatic and
dependable - and ruling - PAP. As an idealist, JBJ was seen by the authorities
as unsuitable for the technocratic demands of modern-day governance. It was
precisely the authorities' response to his idealism and passion for what he
believed in that made him a walking, talking reminder for Singaporeans to stay
out of politics. As the embodiment of idealism, he was deemed politically
irrelevant.
Now, after his death, when his response is no longer possible, this embodiment
can be fashioned for the purpose of nation-building. It was never the case that
JBJ was irrelevant, rather he was inconvenient. Now that the negative
connotations that came with his idealism are purged, leaving only opaque words
like sincerity, tenacity and courage, the man can now be rehabilitated for
national memory. We can now co-opt his idealism and passion for our own agenda.
And so we sanitize him. We speak of him as a fighter, but not what he fought
for - pluralist democracy, human rights and press freedom. We speak of his
great struggles, but not what he struggled against - PAP hegemony,
authoritarianism, the use of punitive lawsuits in politics and so on. He was a
fighter in a vacuum; he struggled against the unspoken; and JBJ is well on his
way to becoming an abstract museum artifact in the halls of our national
memory.
All nation-building projects are exercises in cognitive dissonance on a grand
scale. Cognitive dissonance comes about when one's beliefs do not match
reality, resulting in a modification of these personal beliefs because reality
is harder to change than beliefs. And so too with nation-building: historical
events and personalities cannot be totally erased, but they can, and often are,
redefined and reinterpreted to match the beliefs and values of dominant
interests.
If this were to happen to JBJ, then Singapore's loss would be aggravated. We
would not only have lost the man, but also his values. We would have allowed
his life, his struggles, and his beliefs to be redefined and reinterpreted by
the very institutions he confronted.
Terence Chong is a fellow at Singapore's Institute of Southeast Asian
Studies.
1. Jeyaretnam, a lawyer, served as an MP for the Workers' Party of Singapore
from 1981-86, and again from 1997-2001. He was a continual barb in the flesh of
the ruling People's Action Party. In the course of his political career, he
faced numerous court cases involving defamation suits and other charges, which
led to his disbarment, disqualification from contesting elections, and
bankruptcy, from which he was discharged last year. He leaves two sons and four
grandsons.
RIP
Originally posted by youyayu:RIP
the topic or jbj?
PAP would give chances to second generations of opposition.
Lim Ching Siong brought his two sons back to SG for education.
They became doctors.Another son of a former communist opposition
was also allowed return to work in SG from PRC.
GCT gave JBJ's two sons letters to show to their then prospective employers that:
http://theonlinecitizen.com/2008/10/vivian-balakrishnan-attends-jbjs-wake/
However, our differences were not personal. In 1993, one of you (Kenneth) wrote to Mr Goh Chok Tong, who was then Prime Minister, to say that you found employers in Singapore reluctant to offer you a job, and your only explanation was that the employers felt the authorities would not welcome your employment because of your name. Mr Goh replied with a letter which could be shown to prospective employers, to say that the government did not hold anything against you, and that employers should evaluate you fairly on your own merits, like any other candidate, because Singapore needed every talented person that it could find. Mr Goh had previously made the same point to your brother Philip, whom he had invited to lunch. I am therefore happy that both of you have established yourselves in Singapore.
Please accept my deepest condolences.
LHL
A great loss.... You shall be remembered, another warrior down and out....
Originally posted by lionnoisy:PAP would give chances to second generations of opposition.
Lim Ching Siong brought his two sons back to SG for education.
They became doctors.Another son of a former communist opposition
was also allowed return to work in SG from PRC.
GCT gave JBJ's two sons letters to show to their then prospective employers that:
http://theonlinecitizen.com/2008/10/vivian-balakrishnan-attends-jbjs-wake/
They should give Lim Chin Siong's sons chance. Without LCS, there would be no PAP today. He was a deciding factor that allowed PAP to win the elections.